Structural changes of the ventral velum of Xenopus laevis tadpoles from late prometamorphosis (stage 58) to
the height of metamorphic climax (stage 62) were examined by light and transmission electron microscopy.
Special emphasis was given to the blood vessel regression. Early changes of velar capillaries were formation
of luminal and abluminal endothelial cell processes, vacuolation, and cytoplasmic and nuclear chromatin
condensation. At the height of metamorphic climax, transmission electron microscopy revealed apoptotic
endothelial cells with nuclear condensation and fragmentation, intraluminal bulging of rounded endothelial
cells which narrowed or even plugged the capillary, and different stages of endothelial cell detachment
(‘shedding’) into the vessel lumen. These changes explain the ‘miniaturisation’ of the velar microvascular bed
as well as the typical features found in resin-casts of regressing velar vessels which have been observed in a
previous scanning electron microscopy study of the ventral velum.